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* * * * The Government of Dr. Stresemann has
The Spectatorfallen, and his last speech to the Reichstag, on Thursday, November 22nd, was made under police. protection, ()Wing to the threats of the Communists. As the author of the speech...
The only speech which we need mention here is Mr.
The SpectatorBaldwin's at Bristol on Monday night. Quite apart from the great issue of Protection, it should be read by anyone who wishes to understand the Prime Minister and the enormous...
As the Reichstag is approaching its limit of life it
The Spectatormight have been supposed that it would 1w dissolved, but President Ebert preferred to try to find a new Chan- cellor to carry on under the old condition ,, . Ile applied to Dr....
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorM IE election rumbles on under a cross-fire of oratory. Each of the three parties has satisfactorily proved that an analysis of the nominations demonstrates that its success is...
From these figures, of course, there is only one obvious
The Spectatorconclusion, namely, that whichever party it is that will benefit by triangular fights will hold an enormous advantage. Which' this party Is, of course, depends on whether it is...
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Meanwhile an American and Canadian conference on liquor-smuggling is sitting
The Spectatorat Ottawa. It began on Tuesday. It is said that the American representatives want to refuse clearances to vessels with liquor cargoes, and to demand the right of search in...
The Warsaw correspondent of the Times described in the issue
The Spectatorof Friday, November 23rd, the impressions of Bishop Bury, who had just returned to Warsaw, from a visit to Moscow. Bishop Bury takes a very grave view of the prospects of the...
The seizure of a British schooner by the American authorities
The Spectatoris an inopportune incident which might spoil the favourable prospects of an agreement about a twelve-mile limit of search if it were handled unwisely or if popular passions were...
The Daily Mail of Thursday said, in a leading article
The Spectator:— " The Times published yesterdayaleading article upon the future of British relations with France which was almost incendiary in conception and character. As the Times is an...
Meanwhile French policy has obtained one of its objects in
The Spectatorthe conclusion of an agreement with the chief Industrialists of the Ruhr, including Herren Stinnes, Vogler and Klockner. Thus the control of the Ruhr has passed definitely into...
On Tuesday the Times published an interesting message from.its Paris
The Spectatorcorrespondent, who had evidently been informed of the lines on which a settlement had been reached by the Tangier Conference. From his message it appears that a somewhat...
This statement, of course, means anything or nothing ; the
The Spectatoridea that a measure of internationalization can be introduced which will in no way detract from the Sultan's sovereignty, clearly, is fallacious. But on the whole it would seem...
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. It was announced on Saturday last that, after seven
The Spectatormonths, the boilermakers' lock-out had ended. The Boilermakers' Society decided after a ballot to accept the settlement which was agreed upon at a recent confer- ence in...
On Tuesday the Special Service Squadron which is to visit
The Spectatorevery part of the British Empire sailed under the command of Sir Frederick Field. It consists of the two battle-cruisers ' Hood ' and ' Repulse,' and four light cruisers of the...
The Report on the Imperial Institute at South Ken- sington,
The Spectatorwhich was drawn up by a Committee under the chairmanship of Mr. Ormsby-Gore, has been published as a White Paper. The founders' conception of the Institute was that it should...
There seems to be some idea that this opinion, repre-
The Spectatorsented by the Medico-Psychological Association, sanctions There seems to be some idea that this opinion, repre- sented by the Medico-Psychological Association, sanctions the...
On Friday, November 23rd, the doors of the second or
The Spectatorinner shrine in Tut-ankh-Amen's tomb were reached. It was found that they are bolted, corded and sealed with the unbroken seal of the Royal Necropolis. Thus, it seems certain...
We have to thank our readers for kindly sending us
The Spectatorinformation in regard to pledges and assurances made by candidates as to the application of the Referendum. We are glad to say that there are quite a number of eases in which...
The Committee therefore recommend that the Institute should discontinue the
The Spectatorattempt to illustrate, by means of Exhibition Galleries, the resources of the Empire. and that a representative selection of Imperial products should he made for the purpose of...
Bank Rate, 4 per cent., changed from 3 per cent.
The SpectatorJuly 5, 1923 ; t per cent. War Loan was on Thursday; 100 Thursday week, 100i ; a year ago, 99k.
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE POLITICAL CONFUSION : THE REFERENDUM REMEDY. N OTHING is more remarkable than the confusion of the public mind over the conflicting policies and personalities that occupy...
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THE . PRESS AND THE ELECTION.
The SpectatorW HEN Lord Rothermere "and Lord Beaverbrook entered into partnership and became the principal proprietors of the new great newspaper combine, the public were filled with...
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By SIR JOSIAH STAMP.
The SpectatorTr HE actual 'ultimate effects of a levy must vary according to the political circumstances by which it is attended, for such circumstances may be classified gong a line between...
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THE REFERENDUM BILL.
The SpectatorI T appears that there are still plenty of people who " cannot see how it would be possible to hold a Referendum in this country." Perhaps the best way to show them that there...
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THE ROOT.
The SpectatorP LANTS with evil properties are generally evil in appearance. The henbane has sticky leaves and a foul smell ; its flowers are unhealthy-looking. The poisonous aconite has a...
A BILE /NTITULED
The SpectatorAn Act to provide for the taking of a Poll of the Parliamentary Electors of the United Kingdom with respect to certain Bills in Parliament ; and for other purposes connected...
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THE
The SpectatorENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD. By EVELYN WRENTCII. R EADERS of the Spectator will recall some remarki of mine some months since concerning the inves- tigations into the supposed...
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THE THEATRE.
The Spectator"THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST," AT THE HAYMARKET. Jr you come fresh to it, The Importance of Being Earnest is a charming play. Its wit has so much background ; its...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorJOURNALISM AS A DANGEROUS TRADE. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] drop my book, and turn to watching my neighbours, a young man and woman, presumably lovers, who sit beside me...
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THE REFERENDUM.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, -Ilt re the question as to the Referendum in your issue of the 24th inst., the following Parliamentary candidates have replied to me :—...
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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSrn,—I have read with the greatest interest and sympathy your signed articles in the Spectator on the Referendum. I am heartily: in sympathy with you—in fact, for years I have...
LIQUOR-SMUGGLING INTO THE UNITED STATES.
The Spectator[To the Editor of thi SPECTATOR.] • • Sna,-:--In the latest issue of the (British) Temperance Legisla- tion League's Monthly Notes there appear some remarks about...
THE CAPITAL LEVY.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The interesting and candid letter under this head from " A Business Man of Sixty-five," in your issue of November 24th, is unfortunately...
UNIONIST FREE TRADERS AND PROTECTION.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sia,—May a Free Trader who is not a Unionist venture without offence to suggest a method by which Unionist Free Tiraders could help to combat...
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THE NEW ITALY AND THE HOLIDAY MAKER.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] was greatly interested in your article on Italy, and although belonging to a very different order of society from your own—I am a shop...
POETRY.
The SpectatorROSE-WINDOW. " LooK, mother, look ! do you not see, Up there in the roof, that burning tree ? And all those coloured fruits that shake So bright above the lovely lake ? Is...
BRITISH AND AMERICAN TYPICAL FOOD.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, —May I politely expostulate with the American gentleman at the Hotel Cecil who seems to imagine, in his letter to you under the above...
THE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND AND THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—It is not unusual for critics to be themselves extremely sensitive to criticism. At a public meeting at King's Hall on November 2nd, in...
THEORIES OF REVOLUTION.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I regret to find myself in disagreement with your reviewer of Mr. Elton's book, The Revolutionary Idea in France. The particular merit "...
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LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
The SpectatorTO the ,pectator FOR TILE No. 4,979.] WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, DECHBER 1, 1923. RWISTERED FOR LTRANBMISSION ABROAD.) GR ATI3.
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CHINESE PAINTING.*
The SpectatorMR. WALEY has written an admirable book on Chinese painters. It is none the less valuable for the cautious spirit in which he discusses their works. He writes as one who desires...
MR. MAX BEERBOHM'S CARICATURES.*
The SpectatorIN caricature at the present time Mr. Beerbohm is supreme. There are many other caricaturists who are bright, clever, biting, witty, or humorous. These achieve their results by...
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TWO ENTHUSIASTS.*
The SpectatorTHESE two volumes are both alike in that they are both books of familiar discourse on all manner of subjects. They are alike, too, in the fact that both are the work of a lover...
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THE WORLD OF FASHION.*
The SpectatorMa. NEVILL, while stating on his title-page that his book is concerned with the period from 1837 to 1922, calls his first chapter " Society and the Great War." As a matter of...
CAUSE FOR REJOICING.*
The SpectatorTHERE are rare occasions when the critic, in the course of his quietly pleasant occupation, is startled into an attitude of reverence. He reads a book which by its careful...
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MY COMMONPLACE BOOK.*
The SpectatorWHEN Mr. Hackett's Commonplace Book first appeared it surprised and delighted a host of readers. To begin with, the book came from Australia, and it was comforting to find that...
.ESSAYS.*
The SpectatorIx What I Have Gathered' the author, who writes under the pen name of J. E. Buckrose, introduces us to a personality so kindly and pleasant that it will give no offence to say...
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AN OUTLAW'S DIARY*
The SpectatorAs one suspected from the pitch of her first volume describing the Karolyi regime, Miss Tormay has no further superlatives left for the real reign of terror that followed under...
A MAN AMONG LAWYERS.t
The SpectatorTT is Mr. Holmes's work in life to reform the manners of those who show signs of being unmannerly in the eyes of the law. He has written this volume to explain his methods and...
A VOICE IN. THE WILDERNESS.*
The Spectator" AFRICA," Mr. Carman says, " is the continent of the future." " The sun withers, the earth here rejects mediocrity, which is the reason why nineteenth-century mercantilism has...
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BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS.
The SpectatorBOYS' BOOKS.* THE tradition of Dean Farrar's Eric dies hard. Or, if it is not the influence of that tradition, where is the fancy bred that allows a " Public School boy " to...
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GIRLS' BOOKS.
The SpectatorIs the woman of the future shadowed forth in the girls' books of to-day ? The name of these books is legion and they are almost all alike. Their unanimity is wonderful, and it...
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"WHEN THE PIE WAS OPENED."*
The SpectatorWHEN the parcel of review books came, the birds did indeed begin to sing. Before, one had just been a dull grown-up person in a room in London, wondering if the sun was going to...
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Lamont JrrInted by W, 8,8etaaT fi Soxe, LTD., 98 &
The Spectator99 Fetter Lane, E.O. 4 ; and Published h" THOILA. SAUNDERS for the " SPECTATOR" (Limited), at their (Mice, No, 10 York Street, Covent Garden, London, W.O. 2, Saturday, December...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHIS WEEK'S BOOKS. GEORGE HERBERT'S brother, Edward, Lord Herbert of Cherbury, was a philosopher of note ; he was also a poet of the metaphysical school, staider and less "...
THE COINER OF PRAGMATISM."
The SpectatorONE of the incidental consequences of the world-wide exacerba- tion of nationalism produced by the War has been a tendency everywhere to carry national distinctions into matters...
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THE TOMB OF TUT-ANKH-AMEN.*
The SpectatorIx the whole record of Egyptian antiquarianism nothing so romantic has ever happened as the finding of the tomb of Tut-ankh-Amen. The general public has been as much interested...
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ECONOMICS AND ETHICS.* Ma. MAartroTr has written what he describes
The Spectatoras a " text-book," containing " an exposition as simple as he can make it of the leading principles of Economic Theory, as understood and expounded by the Classical Economists."...
FICTION.
The SpectatorA RUSSIAN VILLAGE.* BEAUTIFULLY produced and printed, swathed in an alluring wrapper of apple-green, Ivan Bunin'ii novel, The Village, promises well. It turns out, however, to...
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SHORTER NOTICES.
The SpectatorThis compact, profusely-illustrated volume of nearly 700 pages, in large part written by teachers in the University of London, should take its place among standard works as "...
A facetious introduction ushers in a series of deliberately archaic
The Spectatorwoodcuts, illustrating proverbs printed in block letter. They are amusing, but almost devoid of aesthetic value. The book is excellently printed. We hope that future produc-...
FINANCE-PUBLIC & PRIVATE.
The Spectator[By OUR CITY EDITOR.] A GENERAL RALLY. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, — A fortnight ago the stock markets were in the depths of depression, and the American exchange had...
" A romantic city, a little Rome in the West,
The Spectatorand we want some good story about it which shall bring it out of archaeology into the minds of the citizens and the hearts of the children. " Mr. Lethaby has smoothed the path...
SILBERMANN.* M. DE LACRETELLE knows his job. That is praise
The Spectatorwhich can rarely be given to English novelists, and therefore we would recommend them to study Silbermann. It is a book for everybody Who enjoys clean workmanship and careful...
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FINANCIAL NOTES.
The SpectatorIt is almost common ground among those who have given consideration to the matter that nothing has done more to confirm the good relations—founded on mutual esteem—between the...